Bhabanipur Bypoll: Mamata Banerjee’s crucial day was a mix of violence, allegations, low voter turnout

Mamata Banerjee

Over three lakh voters of Bhabanipur, a south Kolkata legislative constituency, casted their votes today, to seal the fate of Trinamool Congress leader Mamata Banerjee, who is looking to enter the state Assembly before the end of her six-month period of Chief Ministership-without-being-an-MLA.

The constituency, which has twice elected Mamata and is considered her home, has pitted the Trinamool Congress supremo against two young faces — BJP’s Priyanka Tibrewal and the CPM’s Srijib Biswas.

The Thursday bypoll saw a relatively low voter turnout amidst isolated disturbances. At the same time, byelections to two other seats in the State and to the Pipili Assembly seat in Odisha saw a higher turnout.

Till 5 p.m., about 53.32% voters had exercised their franchise in Bhabanipur, compared to 76.12% in Jangipur and 78.60% at Samserganj, where, along with Pipili, elections were adjourned due to the death of candidates during the Assembly polls in April.

Banerjee, who is contesting the bypoll from Bhabanipur Assembly constituency to retain her chair, cast her vote at Mitra Institution School around 3 pm.

The results of the four elections will be out on October 3. The Bhabanipur bypoll is crucial, as Banerjee had lost the election from Nandigram in May.

BJP candidate from Bhabanipur Priyanka Tibrewal raised allegations of electoral malpractices at some of the polling booths. The office of the Chief Electoral Officer denied the allegations, saying no irregularities took place.

The BJP also raised allegations against Ministers Firhad Hakim and Subrata Mukherjee, claiming that they were moving around polling booths and trying to influence voters. Both denied the allegations, saying they were merely interacting with party supporters at different party offices and did not try to influence voters.

A vehicle of BJP leader Kalyan Chaubey was attacked and damaged at Bhabanipur. According to the police, there was no political connection with the incident and the attack was due to an altercation with a person on a motorbike.

BJP government wants to establish surveillance state; accused Mamata Banerjee

mamata Banerjee

On Wednesday, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee accused the BJP-led Government of trying to establish a “surveillance state”, latching on to the Pegasus snooping row.

The Trinamool congress supremo also asked the Supreme Court to take cognizance of snooping scandal that purportedly targeted politicians, activists, journalists and even judges using the Pegasus spyware. She also asked opposition parties to come together to defeat the BJP in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.

Also See: Cyber warfare from China-part-II

Addressing the Martyrs’ Day rally in Kolkata online, she said, “The BJP wants to convert a democratic country into a surveillance state rather than a welfare state.”

Every year on July 21, the TMC observes Martyrs’ Day to commemorate the killing of 13 people in police firing on a rally of Youth Congress workers against the then Left Front government in 1993 when Mamata Banerjee was in the Congress.

The West Bengal CM and TMC chief also accused the Centre of spending the money collected through tax on fuel & other commodities for spying using a “dangerous software” instead of funding welfare schemes.

Also Read: Rahul Gandhi, Prashant Kishor & Ashok Lavassa among those targeted for NSO-Pegasus surveillance which has drawn attention of UN

Mamata Banerjee told the rally, “I know my phone is being tapped. All Opposition leaders know that our phones are being tapped. I cannot speak to NCP leader Sharad Pawarji or other Opposition leaders or Chief Ministers because we are being snooped and spied on by the Centre. But snooping on us would not save them in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls.”

West Bengal CM slammed the BJP-led NDA government for its “monumental failure” in handling the second wave of the Covid19-crisis. The TMC supremo also termed the saffron party a “highly loaded virus party” which needs to be defeated at any cost.

Also Read: Suvendu Adhikari blamed the overconfidence of Bengal BJP leaders for the election defeat

Mamata Banerjee thanked leaders of the Congress, NCP, SP, Shiv Sena and several other parties for joining her rally virtually from New Delhi. She said that all those opposed to the BJP and its “authoritarian regime” should defeat it.

The Bengal leader, who is being looked as an integral part of an opposition, said, “The BJP has taken the country to darkness, we all have to come forward to take it to new light.”

Renewing the battle cry she made during the state Assembly elections, Ms Banerjee declared, “Khela Hobe” (will play). The West Bengal CM further added that the fight will continue till BJP is ousted from power.

Mukul Roy and his son returned to TMC giving a jolt to BJP

BJP vice president Mukul Roy returned to Trinamool Congress. Roy, who is a co-founder of Trinamool, returned to TMC a week after Narendra Modi called him. It is worthwhile to note that Modi’s call had come 12 hours after Abhishek Banerjee of TMC had gone to the hospital where Roy’s wife was under treatment for Covid19.

Also Read: Thirty-three turncoats want to return to TMC; fate to be decided in a key closed door meeting

Mukul Roy said that he was happy that he was welcomed back to TMC. He alleged that he was not allowed to work in BJP. He joined back into TMC in the presence of Abhishek Banerjee and Mamata Banerjee. On Mukul Roy’s return, West Bengal CM and TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee commented, “Ghorer chhele ghore phire elo”, meaning that son has returned to his home. She also said that only those who are sober and do not encourage bitterness are welcome, alluding that it would be hard for Suvendu Adhikari to jump back into TMC.

Also Read: What led to BJP’s defeat-Important highlights at the conclusion of the West Bengal election

Mukul Roy stated that West Bengal and TMC were indeed his home and that he was beyond glad that TMC allowed him to return. He said that more turncoats in BJP would follow suit.

On Mukul Roy’s return, a BJP leader-Suraj Singh commented that Mamata Banerejee’s TMC is committing political genocide on BJP party-men.

Mukul’s son Subhranshu Roy also returned to TMC, in a beginning of ghar-wapasi towards Mamata’s party.

Also Read: TMC vs BJP-Giving too much attention on criticizing a non-existential opponent can cause problem

After the victory of TMC in state assembly election, political landscape looks to be consolidating in the favour of Trinamool and Mamata Banerjee. First, the farmer-leaders at national-level chose to come to Kolkata to meet Mamata Banerjee in order to ask her to implement an MSP model for the nation to be emulated. Second, the return of leaders like Mukul Roy back to Trinamool is indicating the shift of balance of power on the federal scale towards regionally relevant parties like TMC.

Fall of Congress and Left in West Bengal election- a brief overview

Cong-left

When Trinamool Congress led by Mamata Banerjee claimed landslide victory in West Bengal for the third time in a row, their primary challenger, the BJP will be consoling themselves by looking at the meteoric rate at which they have made their inroads into the state. BJP had won a mere 3 seats in the 2016 Assembly polls and were bolstered to around 80 seats in 2021.

The Left-Congress-ISF alliance, or the Sanjukta Morcha or the jot, has been left decimated. The alliance is currently on course to win either one seat, or none at all.

Also Read: Post-election violence in West Bengal at Arambagh, Nandigram, Natabari, Beleghata

In 2016, the Left-front had won 32 seats, and the Congress 44. The combined fall for both of them to the tune of 75-76 seats is a massive one. They were not in with a real shot at coming to power, but this is a debacle by the yardstick of even their most conservative expectations.

Over last decade, a Left-to-Right worker-shift phenomenon has occurred in West Bengal, in which longtime Left workers and voters alike were migrating to the BJP. The shift of the Left voters towards the right had helped the BJP across Bengal in 2019. In 2021 though, it is the consolidation of the anti-BJP voters that has proved decisive in certain regions of the state.

Also Read: Sitakulchi firing-Facts on the ground do not add up with the claims by the central forces

In any election where only two parties have any reasonable shot at coming to power, a third-party/alliance is likely to take a hit, especially since voters will not perceive that option as “really being in the race.”

The TMC-BJP binary on the key narratives of this election, such as “minority appeasement” and “Bangali vs bohiragoto (outsider)” further reinforced this and ensured that the Left was not really in the conversation that voters were having.

A large citizens’ campaign called ‘No Vote to BJP’ urged voters in the state to cast their ballot in favour of the strongest non-BJP alternative, as did rallies by protesting farmer leaders like Rakesh Tikait. But Left leaders and workers seemed miffed about campaigns like ‘No Vote to BJP’, as this does not chalk out an alternative to the BJP.

For example, Aishe Ghosh had remarked that, “When you do not tell the people what the alternative is, the problem lies there.”

Also Read: West Bengal is a tough battlefield for BJP-an overview from historical, cultural & economic standpoints

In a political subtext, the concern among the Left-Congress-ISF alliance was that if such a narrative took hold among voters opposed to the BJP, they could consolidate behind TMC instead, as by and large, across Bengal, TMC was seen as the more potent challenger to the BJP.

Especially in Muslim-majority districts like Malda and Murshidabad, fears of a splitting of the Muslim vote helping the BJP led to a consolidation for the TMC. This further reduced the Left-Congress-ISF alliance’s seat prospects.

It is a combination of these and myriad other factors that has reduced the once-mighty Left and Congress to almost nothing in West Bengal. And as far as the Left’s role is concerned in Bengal’s Vidhan Sabha, they were ousted from power in 2011, and have now been ousted from the opposition in 2021.

Sixth phase of election in West Bengal-17.25% turnout till 11 am-306 candidates in fray

Phase-6 Bengal

Today is the day of the sixth phase of the West Bengal polls. Over 1 crore voters in West Bengal will decide today the political fate of 306 candidates, when 43 Assembly constituencies are into the polls in the sixth phase, amid a raging second wave of Covid-19. West Bengal election has been a high-pitched personal battle for leaders in Trinamool Congress & BJP, with volleys of accusations and counter-accusations being exchanged between the parties.

Also see: Trilateral fight in West Bengal election 2021

In terms of voter turnout, about 17.25 percent of voters exercised their franchise till 11 am, where polling is underway in 43 seats.

In today’s fray, heavyweights such as Bharatiya Janata Party’s national vice-president Mukul Roy, Trinamool Congress ministers Jyotipriyo Mallick and Chandrima Bhattacharya, and CPI(M) leader Tanmay Bhattacharya are contesting. Also among other prominent names in the sixth-phase are those of film director Raj Chakraborty and actor Koushani Mukherjee, who are TMC’s candidates from the Barrackpore and the Krishnanagar North constituencies respectively.

Also See: West Bengal 2021: Battleground for BJP and TMC

In the context of the Covid19 surge during election season, GopalKrishna Gandhi, the former Governor of West Bengal said that the surge in virus in West Bengal that has coincided with the on-going Assembly elections has jeopardized “the health of the electors, the election staff, and security personnel on duty simultaneously and staggeringly”.

Also See: Would West Bengal election really be a three-way fight after the defections?

In his letter to election commission of India, he said that the electoral democracy and public health should not be “out of harmony”.

Also See: New mutants of Coronavirus

Mr. Gandhi wrote in his letter to the CEC, “Please consider placing an immediate ban on all public rallies and door-to-door campaigning in the State till the last vote has been cast on April 29. And direct them to move to virtual campaigning. It should not be said that India’s electoral democracy and India’s public health are out of harmony.”

Sixth-phase election in West Bengal- What all you need to know about the upcoming phase

Phase-6 Bengal

In the West Bengal election 2021, the stage is all set for the sixth phase of polling on April 22 (Thursday). The sixth phase will be held in 43 Assembly constituencies in four districts of Uttar Dinajpur, Nadia, North 24 Parganas and Purba Bardhaman.

Also See: Would West Bengal election really be a three-way fight after the defections?

Heavy security arrangements have been out in place across 10,897 polling booths. In the sixth phase of voting 306 candidates are trying their luck.

Polling in West Bengal is taking place in eight phases. Out of these, five phases have concluded. The next phase, the sixth phase, will take place tomorrow (April 22). The election campaign and canvassing have continued there in full swing. Vote counting in all states will take place on May 02. In poll-bound West Bengal, Trinamool Congress led by Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee is fighting to keep the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)’s surge at bay.

Also See: What are the problem areas of TMC and the chances of BJP in this election season in West Bengal

Over one crore voters in the state will decide the political fate of 306 candidates on Thursday when 43 assembly constituencies go to polls in the sixth phase, amid a raging second wave of Covid19. An official from Election Commission of India said that security measures have been heightened in view of the violence in the previous phases, particularly the death of five people in Cooch Behar in the fourth phase of polling on April 10.

Also See: West Bengal 2021: Battleground for BJP and TMC

The official added that the poll panel has decided to deploy at least 1,071 companies of central forces in the sixth phase to ensure free and fair voting.

The Matua strongholds of Bongaon and Krishnanagar, near the India-Bangladesh border, are among the 43 constituencies across four districts in the fray, in the sixth phase of the West Bengal elections.

Also see: Trilateral fight in West Bengal election 2021

With citizenship for refugees having emerged as a key poll plank for the BJP in the run-up to the elections, the party will be closely observing the verdict in these segments to run a test case for weighing pros and cons for the newly enacted Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA). Trinamool Congress (TMC), on the other hand, has been claiming that the BJP made “false promises” to the members of the politically significant Matua community on citizenship and that these people already are Indian citizens.

In view of a rising number of cases of Covid19, the Election Commission of India has reduced the election campaign period 72 hours before the voting date.

Also See: New mutants of Coronavirus

The polling will be held from 7 am to 6.30 pm. The Covid-19 patients can cast their vote in the last one hour. In order to enhance the transparency of the election process, the poll panel will be using Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) along with Electronic Voting Machine (EVM) at every polling station.

TMC files complaint of MCC violation against BJP on the pic of PM appearing on Covid vaccine certificate

Model Code of Conduct

Trinamool Congress (TMC) wrote to the Election Commission alleging that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s photo on certificate issued to those who have been vaccinated against COVID-19 violates the Model Code of Conduct (MCC) currently in effect in poll-bound states.

The MCC comes into force from the day the poll panel announces the schedule for the election and remains in effect until results are declared.

TMC leader Derek O’Brien shared the vaccination certificate carrying PM Moid’s photo and  tweeted, “PM photo still brazenly appearing on #COVID19 documents.”

“Elections declared. PM photo still brazenly appearing on #COVID19 documents. Trinamool @AITCofficial taking this up strongly with Election Commission @ECISVEEP”,  he said in a tweet.

The Election Commission, in the last press conference of the CEC, announced the dates for Assembly elections in Assam, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Puducherry on February 26. The elections in all four states and the Union Territory will be held from March 27 to April 29 and counting will be done on May 2.

Twelve-member committee formed by TMC for candidate selection & campaigning for the upcoming assembly election-crucial inputs to be taken from I-PAC

Trinamool Congress (TMC) announced a 12-member election committee

On Friday, Trinamool Congress (TMC) announced a 12-member election committee that will look into the selection of candidates and plan a campaign for the upcoming assembly polls.

The panel will be headed by West Bengal Chief Minister and TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee, party’s secretary-general Partha Chatterjee said after its core committee meeting.

Senior party leaders, MPs and MLAs are other members of the committee, he said.

Subrata Bakshi, Abhishek Banerjee, Sudip Banerjee, Derek O Brien, Sougata Roy, and C M Jatua are members of the election panel.

Firhad Hakim, Subrata Mukherjee, Partha Chatterjee Chandrima Bhattacharya, and Aroop Biswas are also part of the team.

Also See: Would West Bengal election really be a three-way fight after the defections?

According to party sources, the TMC leaders had extensively discussed the issues related to the selection of candidates and planned for the campaign.

“Selection of the candidates will be an important thing this time and inputs from election strategist Prashant Kishor and his team I-PAC will play an important role in it,” a party leader said.

Also See: What are the problem areas of TMC and the chances of BJP in this election season in West Bengal

Assembly polls for the West Bengal legislative assembly will be held in eight phases, up from seven last time, beginning with polling for 30 seats on March 27, Chief Election Commissioner Sunil Arora said while announcing the poll schedule.

(PTI)

West Bengal election 2021: Mamata can win a third-term in the upcoming state election in Bengal, as per opinion poll

West Bengal election 2021 Mamata

A recently conducted opinion poll predicted that the Trinamool Congress (TMC) will return to power in West Bengal for the third time albeit with a lesser number of seats in the Assembly elections. The opinion poll conducted by the CNX and ABP Ananda (a private news channel) showed that the TMC will get around 146 to 156 seats, while the BJP will win around 113 to 121 seats.

The magic figure in the West Bengal Assembly is 148 and the state has a total of 294 Assembly constituencies. The survey was conducted among 8,960 persons in 112 Assembly constituencies in Bengal from January 23 to February 7.

Also see: Trilateral fight in West Bengal election 2021

The opinion poll predicted that the TMC will face a reduction not only in the number of seats but also in terms of vote share. It bagged 211 seats and 44.9% votes it bagged in the last Assembly elections. But according to the opinion poll, it will get 42% votes in the upcoming Assembly elections. The BJP is predicted to record a major leap in terms of number of seats and vote share since the last Assembly elections in 2016 where it only won three seats and got 10.2% votes. It showed that the saffron party’s vote share in the upcoming Assembly elections will shoot up to 37%.

Also See: Would West Bengal election really be a three-way fight after the defections?

However, the Left-Congress alliance is predicted to end up with a lesser number of seats and vote share. The opinion poll showed that the alliance will get 20 to 28 seats and 17% votes compared to 76 seats and 32% votes it got in the last Assembly elections. Other parties are predicted to win one to three seats and get 3% votes whereas they won no seats and got 12.9% votes in the last Assembly elections. The opinion poll predicted that the AIMIM will get around 1% votes.

Also See: West Bengal 2021: Battleground for BJP and TMC

According to the survey Mamata Banerjee got a substantial lead over BJP State president Dilip Ghosh in terms of who the voters want to see as the next chief minister of Bengal. While 38% of those who participated in the survey preferred Mamata, 19% preferred Ghosh. State BJP spokesperson Samik Bhattacharya said that “if even before the declaration of the model of conduct, the BJP is predicted to win so many seats, one can understand that we will achieve our target of 200 seats if free and fair elections are held.”  Senior TMC leader and Minister Tapas Roy said that “regardless of what surveys predict the people of Bengal will vote for Mamata Banerjee because of her development works.”

(CNX, ABP Ananda, DH)

Bengal Government led by TMC under Mamata Banerjee completes 10 years as the ruling regime of West Bengal

Trinamool Congress – TMC just completed its 10 years as a ruling party in West Bengal. It is looking forward to releasing the party’s final report card. The major point of focus shall be the development and reforms brought in by the party since it came into power in 2011 after dislodging Left front from the power.

The recent highlight of TMC is the biggest outreach program it launched, as part of which the workers and leaders of TMC would reach 10 million households in the state focusing on the development strategies. The report card is crucial as it plays an integral role in the upcoming 2021 assembly polls. As per a statement issued by a senior TMC official, the report card will highlight the entire development program launched by TMC in the past 10 years. The official further added, “Each department of the government would come up with its own ledger on what it has done in these years, projects launched and promises kept. The report card would highlight more than a dozen programs of the government.”

TMC has also introduced a new outreach programme called ‘Bongodhhoni’ which means ‘sound of Bengal’. Launched by the party leader and Chief Minister of West Bengal -Mamata Banerjee, it focuses on reaching out to all the women who might not even be TMC supporters to bring about a social movement in support of women. Another interesting programme launched by TMC is the ‘Duare Sarkar’ briefly translated to ‘Government at doorstep’. This program aims to highlight the development activities and programs introduced by the ruling party.

State Education minister Partha Chatterjee, who was present at the launch of ‘TMC Report Card-Ten Years of Development, said that the schemes floated by the Mamata Banerjee government in the last decade have benefited a huge section of people. He also said that party leaders would reach out to people in all 294 assembly constituencies of the state with the report card. Among others, state minister Firhad Hakim and MPs Derek O’Brien and Sudip Bandyopadhyay were also present at the TMC Bhavan during the event.

On the other hand, JP Nadda, the national president of the party trying to make inroads into Bengal polity, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), is currently on a two-day visit to West Bengal where he aims at holding two rallies at the Diamond Harbour with the BJP leaders and members of the fishermen community. Nadda had earlier held an outreach program in Bhowanipore, South Kolkata on Wednesday, December 9. From the looks of it, BJP is hoping to turn the table in their favour during the 2021 assembly polls after gaining an impressive performance in the 2019 elections. Nadda’s rally faced the ire of the people, buoyed by TMC when it was pelted with stones with many of its cars damaged.